{"id":84851,"date":"2020-04-21T11:17:02","date_gmt":"2020-04-21T09:17:02","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.dandavats.com\/?p=84851"},"modified":"2020-04-21T11:17:02","modified_gmt":"2020-04-21T09:17:02","slug":"lust-bites-the-dust","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.dandavats.com\/?p=84851","title":{"rendered":"Lust Bites the Dust"},"content":{"rendered":"<div class=\"field field-type-text field-field-by-line\">\n<div class=\"field-items\">\n<div class=\"field-item odd\">\n<p>By Chaitanya Charana Dasa<\/p>\n<\/p><\/div>\n<\/p><\/div>\n<\/p><\/div>\n<div class=\"field field-type-text field-field-lead-in\">\n<div class=\"field-items\">\n<div class=\"field-item odd\">\n<p><em>Ravana\u2019s strength \u2013 and his main problem \u2013 originated not in his conspicuous multiple heads but in his less conspicuous heart.<\/em><\/p>\n<\/p><\/div>\n<\/p><\/div>\n<\/p><\/div>\n<p><img decoding=\"async\" src=\"http:\/\/www.dandavats.com\/wp-content\/uploads72\/536_Cc_16-17.jpg\"\/> <\/p>\n<p>The <em>Ramayana<\/em> culminates in a massive war between the vicious Ravana and the virtuous Rama, the Supreme descended in human form. The confrontation between them is triggered by Ravana\u2019s abduction of Rama\u2019s wife, Sita. But its seeds were sowed much     earlier, by the demon\u2019s atrocities that had extended for a long time.<\/p>\n<p>Ravana is traditionally seen as the embodiment of lust. Herein, <em>embodiment<\/em> refers not to the fictional concretization of a human attribute, but to a paradigmatic individual in whom that attribute is strikingly manifested.<\/p>\n<h3>Ravana\u2019s Rampage Repelled<\/h3>\n<p>As the <em>Ramayana<\/em> war neared its finale, Ravana had dispatched all of his foremost warriors to the battlefield, and Rama\u2019s forces had dispatched them from the battlefield and the world. Realizing that the fate of the war now depended on him alone,     Ravana came out to fight with the last of his forces. The demon fought furiously, tearing through the ranks of the <em>vanaras<\/em> (monkeys), trying to reverse the odds that he had thought were overwhelmingly in his favor at the start of the war,     but were now overwhelmingly against him. His initial derisive dismissal \u2013 \u201cWhat can a motley band of humans and monkeys do?\u201d \u2013 had changed to disbelieving despair: \u201cWhat have these humans and monkeys done?\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Unable to tolerate the thought of his defeat or demise, Ravana fought remorselessly, felling opponents wherever he went. Seeing him devastating the <em>vanaras<\/em>, Rama confronted him. The two great warriors fought intensely. Despite his many boons,     Ravana just couldn\u2019t match Rama\u2019s speed and skill in archery. Slowly but unstoppably, he started losing ground. One by one, his bow was cut, his charioteer killed, his chariot wrecked, and his armor destroyed. He was rendered weaponless, defenseless,     motionless \u2013 an easy target for Rama\u2019s final fatal arrows.<\/p>\n<p>But Rama graciously spared the demon. He desired victory through a fair fight between the two of them at their best. As Ravana had already fought many great <em>vanara<\/em> warriors that day, he would now be tired. So Rama let him go, telling him to retreat,     rest, and return the next day,.<\/p>\n<p>Though spared, Ravana felt humiliated. Yet he had no alternative except to run back to his palace while Rama still remained benevolently disposed.<\/p>\n<h3>The Final Battle<\/h3>\n<p>The next morning, Ravana marched out of the city of Lanka, determined to avenge his humiliation. Soon, both Ravana and Rama, who had been fighting other opponents, came face to face. Just as their fight was about to begin, a magnificent chariot descended     in front of Rama. The charioteer bowed to Rama and explained that Indra had sent his chariot and charioteer to assist Rama, who had till then been fighting from Hanuman\u2019s shoulder.<\/p>\n<p>The arrival of a celestial chariot was another reminder to Ravana that he wasn\u2019t fighting an ordinary human being. Of course, had he been in a mood to learn, he could have already learned that lesson by seeing how Rama had felled his colossal and near-invincible     brother, Kumbhakarna, and how Rama\u2019s warriors had felled all his foremost warriors, who had bested even the gods. In fact, he could have learned that lesson even before the war had begun. How? By contemplating Rama\u2019s feat of single-handedly overpowering     the fourteen thousand demons Ravana had stationed at his outpost in Janasthana. Such a feat was far beyond the ken of any human being. Yet the same obstinacy that had blinded Ravana lifelong kept him blind when death stared him in the face.<\/p>\n<p>Incensed to see Indra helping his opponent, Ravana launched a ferocious attack. After a fearsome battle that left both warriors bloodied, Rama slowly gained the upper hand with His peerless archery. Overwhelming Ravana with His unrelenting fusillade of     arrows, Rama used divine arrows to cut off the demon\u2019s ten heads. To Rama\u2019s consternation, however, the heads soon reappeared. He cut them off again, and they appeared again.<\/p>\n<p>Seeing Rama perplexed, Ravana laughed malevolently, convinced of his invulnerability. With blinding speed, he redoubled his attack, trying to turn the tables on Rama. Ravana had got benedictions from the gods that if his heads or limbs were cut off, they     would reappear. He had frequently used that benediction to baffle his opponents and then overpower them. That was how he had overcome the aged vulture Jatayu, who had become exhausted after the stupendous effort of ripping off several of Ravana\u2019s     heads and arms.<\/p>\n<p>But unlike the aged Jatayu, Rama was young. And He had another decisive advantage: an ally who knew Ravana\u2019s weakness. The demon\u2019s younger brother, Vibhishana, had joined Rama, being appalled by Ravana\u2019s remorseless viciousness. On seeing Rama stymied     by Ravana\u2019s seeming invincibility, Vibhishana rushed to Rama\u2019s side and informed him that Ravana\u2019s life force was kept hidden in his heart. Destroying that life force by attacking his heart was the only way to fell the wicked demon.<\/p>\n<p>Inferring that his secret was being revealed, Ravana rebuked Vibhishana and increased the ferocity of his attack on Rama. Wanting to finish the demon, Rama uttered a mantra given by the sage Agastya known as the Aditya Hrdaya. That mantra\u2019s mystic energy     rejuvenated and empowered Rama. Invoking one of the most powerful celestial arrows at His command, He aimed it at Ravana\u2019s heart and fired it with breathtaking speed. Despite the demon\u2019s frantic efforts to ward off that missile, it unrelentingly pierced     his heart. With a howl that shook the earth, the demon fell, never to rise again.<\/p>\n<h3>The Significance of Ravana\u2019s Reappearing Heads<\/h3>\n<p>The <em>Ramayana<\/em> is an <em>Itihasa<\/em>, a genre of spiritual literature based on historical accounts. Yet its significance extends far beyond mere historical reporting. It depicts timeless values that can guide people through all times in history     to attain the world beyond history \u2013 the timeless spiritual arena of existence.<\/p>\n<p>Seen from this value-centered perspective, Ravana\u2019s reappearing heads might represent our lower desires. Even if we reject one such desire, others keep appearing, as did Ravana\u2019s heads. Just as Rama succeeded only when He directed His arrow not towards     the heads but towards the heart, similarly we can succeed when we direct our purificatory effort not towards specific desires but towards our heart, towards the misdirection of our love away from the Lord to the world.<\/p>\n<p>Ravana\u2019s ten heads were conspicuous. Yet his strength lay not there, but in a less conspicuous part: his heart. Similarly, gross wrongdoings are conspicuous. But what corrupts us most is not such specific wrongdoings, but our fundamental wrongdoing of     being disconnected from divinity. Wrongdoing refers not just to the wrong we do, but also the right we don\u2019t do. As long as we don\u2019t do the right of connecting devotionally with our Lord, we will keep succumbing to one wrong desire or another \u2013 the     heads will keep reappearing. When we make our heart right by practicing bhakti-yoga diligently, our lower desires soon get exiled from our heart, fully and forever.<\/p>\n<p>The fall of Ravana is commemorated in the festival of Dussehra, wherein a huge effigy of the demon king is set ablaze. Often, a flaming arrow is shot at the wooden effigy, reenacting Rama\u2019s fatal attack on Ravana. Just as Ravana\u2019s fall was celebrated     with cheers by the many gods and sages assembled to watch the battle, so too is the fall of Ravana\u2019s effigy cheered by onlookers assembled for Dussehra.<\/p>\n<p>The imagery centered on fire is significant. Fire sacrifices are time-honored means for sanctification. Additionally, fire is used for cremation after death. The body\u2019s cremation releases the soul from any lingering attachment to its physical shell, freeing     it to travel to its next destination.<\/p>\n<p>The incineration of Ravana\u2019s effigy can be said to signify the incineration of our lower desires and the sanctification of our consciousness, which becomes detached and free to rise to higher levels of reality. While cheering the razing of Ravana\u2019s effigy,     we can pray that our lower desires be similarly razed by the purifying fire of devotion.<\/p>\n<h3>Gender Depictions<\/h3>\n<p>Some people feel that Indian traditions portray women negatively as agents of illusion. In fact, Maya, who embodies the illusory energy of the Lord, is a female. However, the foremost force of illusion is lust, and it is embodied as Ravana, a male.<\/p>\n<p>Philosophically speaking, lust in particular and illusion in general are gender neutral. The same <em>Ramayana<\/em> that depicts the masculine Ravana as an embodiment of lust also depicts his sister, Surpanakha, as a female embodiment of lust. In fact,     it was her lust for Rama and her subsequent assault on Sita, whom she saw as her competitor in gaining Rama\u2019s attention, that escalated tensions between Rama and Ravana. Worse still, when Ravana had become circumspect on learning of Rama\u2019s formidable     power, it was Surpanakha who inflamed his lusty imagination by fueling it with provocative descriptions of Sita\u2019s beauty.<\/p>\n<p>The <em>Bhagavad-gita<\/em> section that analyzes lust (3.36\u201343) \u2013 how it deludes and how it can be defeated \u2013 doesn\u2019t use any gender-specific language or imagery. To the contrary, the <em>Gita<\/em> (3.40) states that lust is present in all living beings     \u2013 in their senses, mind, and intelligence. Lust deludes and degrades everyone it controls; it makes men into monsters and women into witches. Captivated by lust, men perpetrate barbaric atrocities to gratify their desires, and women bewitch and befool     others with their feminine charms.<\/p>\n<p>In contemporary culture, sexual violence is often strongly condemned, and rightly so. Ironically, however, the same culture also condones sexually explicit images \u2013 and rationalizes such depictions as the right to free expression. In a culture that features     both moral perversity and moral ambiguity, the <em>Ramayana\u2019s<\/em> gender-neutral narrative of the universal consequences of uncontrolled lust sounds an essential cautionary note.<\/p>\n<h3>The DUST Acronym<\/h3>\n<p>The phrase \u201cbite the dust\u201d signifies defeat, often an ignominious defeat. This usage derives from sports such as wrestling wherein the winner holds the loser down, metaphorically making the latter bite the dust. It could be said that Rama\u2019s fatal arrow     made Ravana bite the dust. His fall represents the fate of those who give themselves to lust.&nbsp;&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p>Additionally, dust in a devotional context refers to the sacred dust of the lotus feet of the Lord and of those devoted to Him. Such dust is considered immensely pure, capable of purging us of our worldly desires. Indeed, becoming blessed by sacred dust     is considered an essential purpose of practicing bhakti-yoga. [See the sidebar \u201cThe Dust of the Lotus Feet.\u201d]\n<p>And how that process of bhakti-yoga can help us overcome lust can be explicated using the acronym DUST: Determination, Understanding, Submission, Training.<\/p>\n<p>Determination: Suppose we are infected with a lethal but curable disease. When the gravity of the disease registers within us, we become determined to take the treatment, even if it is demanding. Similarly, when the grave consequences of infection by     lust register within us, we muster determination to curb and cure it, even if doing so is difficult. The <em>Gita<\/em> (2.41) underscores the need for single-pointed determination. We may have resolved to curb our lower desires in the past and failed.     Such failures may dishearten us into thinking we just don\u2019t have the necessary determination.<\/p>\n<p>However, we all have determination; it\u2019s just misdirected. In our conditioned stage we use our determination to gratify our lower desires. We need to redirect that same determination in the opposite direction \u2013 to fight those desires.<\/p>\n<p>Understanding: <em>Gita<\/em> wisdom helps us understand the deceptive nature of licentious desires: they promise huge pleasure, but deliver only meager pleasure, which too soon gives way to massive trouble. More importantly, <em>bhakti<\/em> literature     help us understand where lust comes from. Love for the Lord is central to our spiritual nature. When it becomes misdirected to worldly objects, it transmogrifies into lust. And when lust is indulged in indiscriminately, it becomes insatiable.<\/p>\n<p>When we lead a life of dharma and practice <em>bhakti-yoga<\/em> for redirecting our love to the Lord, our desires become slowly but surely purified.<\/p>\n<p>This understanding of how lust originates and how it can be redirected complements our determination.<\/p>\n<p>Submission: Our fundamental malaise is the desire to seek pleasure separate from God, whose name \u201cRama\u201d conveys that He is the reservoir of all pleasure. The <em>Gita<\/em> (15.7) states that we are eternal parts of the Lord; when we act apart from Him,     we end up enticed and enslaved by the lower desires in our mind and senses. If we want to end our subordination to our lower desires, we need to cultivate submission to our Lord.<\/p>\n<p>Lest the notion of submission cause some visceral aversion, it\u2019s important to stress that devotional submission to the Lord is not at all like worldly submission. Whereas worldly submission is sometimes demeaning, submission to Him who is our greatest     benefactor is uplifting and empowering. This submission is out of love, just as those in love may say to their beloved, \u201cYour wish is my command.\u201d When we submit ourselves to the Lord, His omnipotence empowers us to overpower our lower desires. By     our diligent practice of <em>bhakti-yoga<\/em>, devotional submission blossoms into devotional absorption, and we transcend our lower desires.<\/p>\n<p>Training: A patient who has been immobilized needs training to walk again. We are spiritually immobilized, being afflicted by our lower desires, which ground our consciousness at the material level. We need training to walk spiritually, that is, to raise     our consciousness to the spiritual level. <em>Bhakti-yoga <\/em>offers this training. Devotional processes \u2013 such as chanting the holy names, studying scriptures, and associating with spiritual people \u2013 train us, through both precept and example, to     keep our consciousness spiritual even amidst life\u2019s temptations and tribulations. The more we practice <em>bhakti-yoga<\/em>, the more we become trained to keep our consciousness safe and spiritual. We learn to purposefully focus our consciousness     on the constructive things we need to do, instead of letting our lower desires drag it to our default attachments.&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p>When lust is thus treated with dust, what results is liberation \u2013 liberation both in this world and beyond it, liberation from shortsighted desires during our stay in this world, and eventually liberation from this material world itself to our Lord\u2019s     eternal abode for a life of unending pure love.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p><img decoding=\"async\" src=\"http:\/\/www.dandavats.com\/wp-content\/uploads72\/536_Cc_16-17.jpg\"\/><img src= \"https:\/\/i.imgur.com\/09dNObt.jpg\" \/><\/p>\n<p>Ravana is traditionally seen as the embodiment of lust. Herein, embodiment refers not to the fictional concretization of a human attribute, but to a paradigmatic individual in whom that attribute is strikingly manifested.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[118],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-84851","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-recent-media"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.dandavats.com\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/84851","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.dandavats.com\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.dandavats.com\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.dandavats.com\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.dandavats.com\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fcomments&post=84851"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/www.dandavats.com\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/84851\/revisions"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.dandavats.com\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fmedia&parent=84851"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.dandavats.com\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fcategories&post=84851"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.dandavats.com\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Ftags&post=84851"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}